Bobby Moynihan Cast in CBS Pilot, Signaling Potential 'SNL' Exit

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The actor and comedian will depart the NBC late-night sketch show should CBS' 'Me, Myself and I' move forward.

Bobby Moynihan is setting his next gig.

The Saturday Night Live featured castmember has been tapped to topline CBS comedy pilot Me, Myself and I, The Hollywood Reporter has learned.

The Boyhood-like single-camera comedy examines one man's life over a 50-year span. It focuses on three distinct periods in his life — as a 14-year-old in 1991, a 40-year-old in present day and a 65-year-old in 2042.

Moynihan will play the present-day version of Alex Riley, a lifelong inventor who is always trying to glimpse into the future. But, to get over his current case of inventor’s block, he must instead look to his past. Moynihan joins a cast that includes Kelen Coleman as adult Abby, his daughter; and Brian Unger as Ron, Alex's step-father.

Galavant's Dan Kopelman will pen the script and executive produce the Warner Bros. Television pilot alongside Kapital Entertainment's Aaron Kaplan, Dana Honor and Randall Einhorn, who will also direct the pilot.

The casting puts Moynihan's future on NBC's Saturday Night Live in question. Should CBS pick up the pilot to series, the actor would exit SNL. Other SNL players who have signed on to star in broadcast or cable pilots (like Will Forte, Andy Samberg and Nassim Pedrad) that have moved to series have typically exited the Lorne Michaels sketch show. Moynihan has been an SNL castmember since 2008. His credits include a voice role on Disney XD's upcoming DuckTales and features Inside Out and The Secret Life of Pets.